Abstract Purpose: Bacterial resistance toward the most used antibiotics is increasing in Helicobacter pylori strains worldwide. Emergence of multidrug resistance significantly affects the efficacy of standard therapy regimens. Therefore, monitoring… Click to show full abstract
Abstract Purpose: Bacterial resistance toward the most used antibiotics is increasing in Helicobacter pylori strains worldwide. Emergence of multidrug resistance significantly affects the efficacy of standard therapy regimens. Therefore, monitoring for primary antimicrobial resistance is essential for H. pylori management in clinical practice. Methodology: H. pylori isolates obtained from patients consecutively observed in a single center were tested for primary resistance by using E-test method. Bacterial strains showing MIC values >0.5, >8 and >1 mg/L toward clarithromycin, metronidazole and levofloxacin, respectively, were considered resistant. The trend of antibiotic prevalence, either single or combined, during 2010–2016 was assessed. Results: Antibiotic susceptibility data were available in 1424 (82.3%) out of 1730 tested patients. The overall resistance for all the three antibiotics showed an increasing trend from 2010 to 2013 (clarithromycin: from 19% to 35.6%; metronidazole: from 33.6% to 45.3%; levofloxacin: from 19% to 29.7%; p < .001), when a plateau until 2016 was observed (clarithromycin: 35.9%; metronidazole: 40.2%; levofloxacin: 29.3%). A similar trend occurred for clarithromycin-metronidazole combined resistance rate (2010: 11.4%; 2013: 28.2%; 2016: 21.9%). Conclusion: Our data suggest that prevalence of primary resistance in H. pylori isolates toward the most frequently used antibiotics probably reached a plateau in the last years.
               
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